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Guaranteed reading with intelligence

Saturday, 1 June 2013

Sonata by Blair McDowell – Book Review

4
out of 5 stars

The music of life:
practice, performance, the closing notes

Sayuri
McAllister left home as a very young adult to study cello performance in Europe
and then study there.Now she has
returned home as a 29 year old to find her family home in Vancouver, Canada,
much changed and in turmoil.The most
prominent upset is that the family mansion, Point Grey, has been burgled and
“two million” dollars’ worth of jewellery stolen.To her surprise Sayuri finds that the
burglary is being investigated by an old high school flame, Detective Michael
Donovan.How will Sayuri adjust to her
family’s changes?Should she pick up
loose threads with Michael?What is the
secret to the mystery of the burglary?

Blair
McDowell has extensive experience as both a musician and a university music
lecturer and this book draws upon that knowledge to create a realistic picture
of a professional musician’s life, particularly the stresses of true
dedication.Sonata moves along skilfully, never boring the reader.The book is of mixed genre: part
romance/erotica, part crime/mystery/thriller.McDowell is equally skilled at both styles and her novel is quite a
success.

Sonata has a fairly standard,
but quite competent, structure. As we
have noted it begins at a high point which poses a number of mysteries and open
questions.The first half of the book
then proceeds, as the opening questions are elaborated.Will, for example, Sayuri even date
Michael?Extra complications and confusions
are also added as the story progresses.At midpoint there are a number of clarifications, and then in the second
half there is a swift and direct progression to the conclusion, though there
are still one or two confusions to trick the reader along the way.The book ends with a peak of crisis, followed
by a final chapter in which all the plot lines and themes very neatly tied up
together and resolved.

The
novel has an omniscient narrator and McDowell uses this technique well.While most of the book is written from
Sayuri’s point of view we are given flashes of other character’s
experiences.This reveals facts which
are counter to what Sayuri believes to be true, often resulting in humour and
irony.Humour also comes in other
ways.In Chapter 3, for example, Sayuri
thinks that Alyssa, the partner of her father and a woman she certainly does
not like, looks “incredibly young and innocent.Rather like the princess in a Disney version of a fairy tale.”Along the way there are one or two “Oh my God!”
moments to knock us off our chair.One
minor criticism is that McDowell twice (Ch. 7 & Ch. 16) has Buttercup,
Michael’s female dog, pee “against a tree.”Of course that is the action of a male dog: females squat.

Sonata’s main theme is
balance.We have many demands, needs and
goals in our life and amongst all of these pressures we need to find some way
of devoting time to all of them.Career
takes up much of our time, but as social beings we need family and friends, as
well as relaxation and entertainment.But how is this to be done?Is it
really achievable?Closely related to
this is the theme of clear thinking.In
our careers we need to rationally weigh things up, but do we always need to be
like that?Surrender to the moment, even
just acceptance of the moment, can be a great release and a great source of
joy.Clear thinking, at times can become
cold rationality and needs to give way to a more holistic approach to life,
including our whole selves: our emotions, our longings, our unmet needs.

McDowell’s
characters are certainly adequately motivated.Sayuri is driven by her dedication to her music and feels a deep need to
be “in charge” (Ch.2) of her life.As a
child she was “lonely” (Ch. 2) and we wonder if that is still the case.She is, for a 29 year old woman, also rather
surprisingly naïve about other aspects of life.She has, for example, never had a stable home of her own, living out of
suit cases as she travels on the concert tours circuit.This aspect of her character makes her rather
interesting and unusual, and raises a ‘parent’s concern’ for her in the mature
reader and an immediate connection in the younger reader.Sayuri is certainly a likable woman and we
immediately care about her and want the best for her.Michael is likable also, particularly with
his boyish “lopsided grin” (Ch. 2 & Ch. 11).He is a guy with ordinary desires and goals
that men can immediately relate to.At
high school he was a ‘jock’.He is
successful in a moderate way, having achieved his personal goals, and has his
moments of real command and assurance.In Chapter 3, decked out in his new suit, he is compared to “James Bond”
and indeed there are moments when this ordinary police man shines.Michael is motivated by simple love, but with
a touch of guilt and regret.McDowell,
as you can see, has made her characters complex enough to seem real.As, for example, Sayuri comments, Michael is
“a study in contrasts” (Ch. 2).Sayuri
has an arc of development that maintains our interest through the book as we
wonder exactly what each next decision will be as she comes to terms with her
new circumstances.McDonald has included
some interesting comparisons and contrasts between characters, such as between
Sayuri and Hugh James, Alyssa’s brother (Ch. 5).These contrasts help us see how to achieve
the right balance in life that the book is so much concerned with.

Symbolism
is lightly used in the book if one cares to consider it.Ireland is referred to repeatedly throughout
the text.All of the main characters
have ‘a touch of the Irish even though distantly.The McAllister family are Irish by name.Hugh has spent most of his life in
Ireland.Alyssa was born in Ireland,
though she has spent most of her life elsewhere.Michael’s family came from Ireland, and he
has a cousin there.This image is
ambiguous, calling to mind likable notions such as ‘blarney’, charm, as well as
negative ideas such as stupidity (Irish jokes) and extended internal conflict
(the sectarian war).Throughout the book
we see references to Brahms’ Cello Sonata
and music in general.This symbol is
also ambiguous.As Roger Scruton points
out in his philosophical work Beauty: a
very short introduction (Oxford University Press, c2011, p. 2-4) art,
including music, can inspire us to our very best, indeed can have an almost
divine aspect, but can also mask evil.As a crime mystery Sonata is
of course about getting to the truth of the matter, and as a romance it is
about finding truth in love.Clear
answers, though, are not always available.Are ‘bad’ people completely bad?Can a question, especially one about relationships, always be answered
by a simple yes or no?

From
the perspective of Feminism McDowell presents three women, Sayuri, Alyssa and
Nora Banks (the McAllister’s housekeeper and cook), all of whom are working
women, all quite capable successful and determined, each in their own way.Sayuri is not only a talented musician as
well as a successful music teacher (Ch. 2), but is also physically fit.In Chapter 6 she jogs quite happily next to
Michael.Sayuri is described as having
an “almost boyish form” (Ch. 2).This
calls to mind the writings of the Postmodernist Feminist Judith Butler in her
“questioning of notions of ‘femaleness’ which are taken for granted in society”
(Cathia Jenainati.Introducing Feminism: Icon Books, 2010, p. 163).Quite early in the book (Ch. 3) the subject
of the career/relationship dichotomy is discussed.Betty Friedan, in her book Feminine Mystique (Reprint ed.:W.W. Norton, 2001) argued that:

… if women learned how to juggle their various
domestic duties, they would find the time and energy to engage in professional
careers.This would ensure them private
and public satisfaction.”(Jenainati, p.
92)

As
many of Friedan’s contemporary feminists asked, though, can this idea
practically and reasonably be achieved?Is every woman a ‘superwoman’?What will the actual details of this dual life be?Some may be annoyed to find that Sayuri seems
to have “female intuition” (Ch. 3), but later in the book Michael too has his
own premonitions.Male domination also
appears in the book.It is certainly
mainly depicted as very undesirable.Interestingly,
though, Michael is quite praised for being old fashioned enough to open a car
door for Sayuri (Ch. 2).

From
the broader point of view of gender studies men are depicted as both strong and
caring/emotional beings.We do not have
here the ‘stern, hard, tough guy’ so much favoured by traditional society.Rather we see the strong, but feeling, New
Age man of Robert Bly (Iron John: men and
masculinity: Rider, 2001, Ch. 8) and the Men’s Movement.Michael is a competent police detective, but
very sensitive to Sayurei’s needs.He
also is an accomplished cook (Ch. 2), something that three decades ago boys
certainly did not learn in school.Sean,
Sayuri’s father, is a very committed businessman, but also caring.Emotions are not at all depicted as weakness
in men as traditional society would have it.

Readers
interested in the LGBTIQ perspective will be disappointed to find that it is
completely absent in the book.To be
fair, though, there are only five main characters in the novel, plus 4 very
minor characters (2 couples).Perhaps a
party guest, or one of Sayuri’s music colleagues, could have represented this
minority in passing?

The
post-colonial contingent is represented by Sayuri’s Japanese grandparents,
“Sofu and Sobo Akatsuko” (Ch. 3 and following) and Sayuri’s mother, none of
whom appear directly in the text.They
are all referred to as absent characters.The difficulties of leaving one culture and entering another are
discussed (Ch. 12).It should be noted
that, while respected, the Japanese culture is not idealized and comes under
some criticism (Ch. 4 & Ch. 7).

The
Canadian indigenous are fleetingly referred to in a reference to “Inuit art”
(Ch. 2).

Other
racial/ethnic minorities living in Canadian society are of course represented
by Sayuri herself, who is half Japanese.Michael reports that he experienced teasing from his class mates for
dating a Japanese girl (Ch. 2).

The
disabled are absent from the story, but as with the LGBTIQ, they would be
harder to include because of the limited number of characters.

Sayuri’s
grandparents of course also represent the elderly.They definitely are guided by past tradition,
which is both represented positively and criticised.The tradition of the old is seen as
reinforcing useful values now increasingly ignored by society, such as respect
for those who have seen more of life.Any value, though, is of course relative.It is good to see this increasingly large,
but ignored, section of the community at least referred to in the text, if not
depicted.

Looking
at the book in terms of society, and more specifically the Marxism/Capitalism
debate we see money, career and success depicted as very important in Canadian
society.The McAllister’s world is that
of big business.Sean is a super-rich,
rather driven computer technology businessman, and the family home is a
“mansion” (Ch. 1 & Ch. 16).Sayuri
is also guided buy success, though not necessarily by wealth.This wealth enabled Sayuri to go to Europe to
enable her music career, and the family’s life is certainly good in terms of
luxury.It is, though, this very wealth
that brings misfortune to the family through theft and other means.The working class is represented by Michael
and he is happy in his life and successful on his own terms.He went to university on a “scholarship” (Ch.
2) and he drives a very ordinary car.The Banks, being lower middle class, find themselves suddenly reduced to
wearing uniforms like servants, though previously they were treated like one of
the family (Ch. 2).In all of this we
can see a tension between Capitalist values and the Marxist critique, which
tries to argue for a fairer, more humane way of life (Gill Hand.Understanding
Marx: Hodder Educational, 2011, Ch. 6).Marx “thought deeply about the relationships between people within [ … ]
society” (Hand, p. 67).McDowell has
written a book very much about these relationships.

In
terms of Structuralism McDowell has written about the fundamental binary of
good/bad.Many ordinary people tend to
view the world as ‘nice’ because they believe themselves to be basically ‘good’
and their lives are reasonably comfortable.Those who have suffered, though, can easily see that this is certainly
naive.As the story progresses, however,
this essential, simplistic view of life is abandoned for a more Postmodern,
complex view.Are we simply good units
or simply bad units?Surely life is
organic and we are a variety and mixture of many things?

McDowell
also draws on the body of knowledge of psychology to make her character and
events more ‘real’.Sayuri experiences
the difficulty that many young adults have to deal with when they return home
as an adult.She notes that she is made
to feel like a “guest in her own home” (Ch. 2). Surely, though she is just
that, a guest, and this is no longer her home, but her parents.She expects life at her parent’s home to be
just the same as when she left, and is very surprised to see that it is
not.Carl E. Pickhardt in his article When “Grown” Kids Boomerang Home to Stay
(Psychology Today: July 11, 2011. http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/surviving-your-childs-adolescence/201107/when-grown-kids-boomerang-home-stay) notes precisely this
kind of “regression”, or inappropriate return to the past.Adult children must learn to be precisely
that: adult.They need to realize that
they must face the new realities of a shift in relationship with their
parents.The scenario arises, which I
will not detail in order to avoid spoiling the plot, in which the victims of
abuse blame themselves for the actions of the perpetrator.The victims of such crimes have certainly
been observed to suffer from precisely this kind of, “guilt”, “shame” and
“self-blame” (Craig Malkin.Why Do People Stay in Abusive Relationships?Psychology Today: March
6, 2013.http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/romance-redux/201303/why-do-people-stay-in-abusive-relationships, and, Craig Malkin. Why You Blame Yourself for Bad Relationships
– and How to Stop.Psychology
Today: May 11, 2012.http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/romance-redux/201205/why-you-blame-yourself-bad-relationships-and-how-stop).Finally it should be noted that McDowell has
Sayuri repeatedly imagine that there must be some reasonable explanation to the
very undesirable goings on in her life: she dismisses evil from her mind.The psychologist and university lecturer
Martha Stout, in her book The Sociopath
Next Door (Broadway Books, c2005, Ch. 8) observes that this is exactly what
people around sociopaths do (including their own tortured family).As was observed in the paragraph about the
Structuralist view of the book, we tend to be naive, thinking that the entire
world is ‘reasonable’ and ‘nice’.

Blair
McDowell has written an entertaining and interesting romance/crime novel that
raises a variety of issues worthy of consideration.McDowell looks at personal issues, such as
increasing maturity and love, but also considers the wider issues of career,
the family, victims of crime and society.McDowell shows a wise and considered understanding of the life of a
musician, but also of life itself.The
novel is paced and structured well, and the characters are realistic.I am happy to award this book 4 out of 5
stars.

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Raymond Mathiesen In Brief

Qualifications

I have a Bachelor of Arts with a double major in literature (James Cook University of North Queensland). In that degree I obtained minors in psychology, modern history and economics.I also have a Graduate Diploma of Library Science in which my studies included management and communications (Queensland University of Queensland).

IdeologyOf course I should give some idea of my predispositions and agendas.

I was brought up in a strong Evangelic Christian tradition, but as an older adult have certainly left that ideology. I have some interest in Eastern religion, but more properly could be discribed as spiritual rather than religious. I am interested in questions of ethics, meaning and being, and the highest aspects and achievements of humanity.

Susan McMichael In Brief

Qualifications

I received my B.A. (Hons) from the University of New England, Armidale, in 1992, majoring in English. I focused on Victorian and American literature. I have also studied Psychology and French.

I have been reading Sylvia Plath since 1983, and studied both Plath and Ted Hughes,at UNE.

Ideology

The Left and the Right are apparently no longer in fashion. We expanded the text and now it has flowed everywhere.

At this rate, Leavis will soon be popular again. Ideology often feels like shifting sands, or a map whose directions I don't really want to follow. Suffice to say, that I don't like Critical Theory, but have read it; feminism is a changing ideology with equality at its core and thank goodness for post modernism, (which has been around for a while).